Grants are open to organisations working with disadvantaged children and young people who are 18 years old and under.Your organisation and project must be based in the UK and you need to be a registered charity or other not-for-profit organisation.

The Trust aims to help registered charities, or those with charitable objectives, working in Cumbria. Priorities include social needs; youth and employment; older people; the arts; the environment. Usually one-off grants of £500- £5000 (average £1,000 – £3,000).

Are one of the leading providers of affordable and supported housing for people in the UK. We work to deliver improvements to communities and provide homes for those who may struggle to get them. By making a difference locally, providing excellent customer service and being flexible and adaptable, we will meet the needs and demands of the people who live in the neighbourhoods we serve. Home manages 52,000 homes and provides care and support services to more than 20,000 people across the UK each year.

We look to fund local and national projects that benefit our customers and the neighbourhoods they live in. Small and larger grants are available through our Local Supporting Communities Fund, National Supporting Communities Fund and the Copeland Homes Investment Fund which is specific for the Copeland areas of our business. For further details please contact John Cass on 01946 518029.

Our aim is to support charities that help disadvantaged people play a fuller role in the community through delivering lasting changes and benefits for their users/beneficiaries.Our funding is needs-driven and our portfolio of grant making programmes is designed to fund issues that affect individuals as well as multiple communities

grant programmes exist to support charitable activities that have particular results, and which contribute to our aims: tackling disadvantage and improving quality of life in North East England and Cumbria. Each programme focuses on outcomes – changes or results – that we are interested in. Within the programmes there are approaches that we think work best to bring about those changes